One of my topics was on Judicial Reform, of which I've been thinking about heavily for the past several months. However such large reform needs to be discussed with the Citizenry First, which is why I have decided to open this topic.
First off the main goal of Judicial Reform is to make the courts a viable option to be used, and also to protect the community from a Rogue Storting by moving some of the near-ultimate authority of the Storting to a Judiciary. I do, however, wish to protect the long-established tradition of our ad-hoc Judiciary System. So I've come up with a few options:
1) Introduce a system of 'Special Panels' and Magistrates.
2) Introduce a system where each branch of Government is represented. (Representative Judicial Panel)
3) Introduce a system where the branches of Government form the entirety of the Judiciary.
I'll go into depth below over these options:
Magistrates and Special Panels
This option would introduce the least amount of change, but would also bring some larger changes to the system.
First off Magistrates would exist, with the Chief Magistrate being appointed by the Monarch and confirmed by the Storting (due to its nature). The Chief Magistrate would be in charge of managing the Magistrates and establishing procedure where there is none for the running of this office.
At the filing of a case, the Chief Magistrate is to appoint a random Magistrate that is uninvolved with the case. The Magistrate would review the case and determine if a Special or Regular panel is to be formed. The Magistrate would also be able to remove people from a petition, or dismiss the petition if it is a repeat of an already decided one. These would be on a case-by-case basis.
After the decision the Chief Magistrate (or the Magistrate over the case, if the Chief Magistrate is a party to the case), would either select the members of the Storting to hear the case or select the members of a Special Panel to hear the case. A Special Panel would be used in the following circumstances:
1) There are not enough members of the Storting that are uninvolved to hear the case
2) The issue is over a conflict between the Fundamental Laws and a law the Storting Passed.
3) The issue is Constitutional in nature.
The Special Panel would be made up of Citizens for the most part (with the rest being selected like a regular panel would be, if possible, and the Chief Justice being appointed by the Chief Magistrate, from the Magistrate list (excluding the original Magistrate). Special Panels would have higher authority over the status of law than the Storting, but otherwise nothing else would change.
This mainly keeps our ad-hoc system, while prevent a run-away Storting from doing too much damage.
Representative Judicial Panels
This idea is a relatively new idea, and would definitely help enshrine the separation of powers within Wintreath, in this idea there would be at least one Justice from each branch (with the Storting potentially getting two, one from the Overhusen and one from the Underhusen).
Each branch would maintain and establish lists of people who can serve as the Justice for that branch, and the person would be randomly selected from that list. Now, the third branch would either be the Administrative 'Branch' (which is somewhat extra-Governmental in nature) or would be selected from the population. (I, personally, lean towards the latter).
If the Storting gets two members then I would increase the Population's members to two, and make the Monarch's appointed Justice the Chief Justice. This would be to balance out the branches, while not making any branch have a clear majority. People may only be a Justice for one branch for a case.
This would introduce wider changes, without changing the overall function of our courts that much, everything else would remain the same, except for higher representation in the Judiciary of our other branches, and also helps enshrine the separation principal a little more, in my opinion.
Large Panels
This is probably the widest sweeping, and probably least effective idea to put here, but it's an idea none-the-less.
This idea would mean that all members of the Storting and the Monarch serve on a Judicial Panel, in addition to a few members randomly selected from the Citizenry. This would make Judicial Panels MUCH bigger than they would be under the other systems, but would be somewhat balanced against each other to prevent any one group from having a Majority (Each vote would be weighted so that no one group could simply vote by themselves and settle the decision. Either two of the groups would have to agree, or all (depending on the implementation)). This means that any decision would have to be a compromise between the two branches, this does do some to enshrine some Wintrean values and principals, and also prevents any branch from being able to impose upon another branch, must like the second idea.
However this does have some drawbacks, namely that of efficiency, as it would be larger and it would include more people (some of which might be a party to the case and thus have to be replaced). I'm not particularly fond this idea, but it is one none-the-less.
Of course, keep in mind that there is the option to just introduce procedural changes to our current system, which would also follow a change with these if it were to occur. There is also the idea of not changing anything, and perhaps some other ideas I haven't exactly considered. I do wish to keep our changes to the current system as much as possible, as it is unique to our region and has stood for nearly five years, but some changes are probably for the best. Also feel free to suggest your own ideas in this field.